Examples

How does it work

Pixelator is a pipline-like tool that process the image using a set of smart filters. One filter handles the pixelation, another applies colors palette, the next smooth the result and so on..

All the filters are highly customisable and can be turned on and off, so Pixelator can handle a large variety of source images, from every style and size, and produce vastly different styles of pixel art. You can achieve almost any pixel-art style imaginable with the right configurations.

When you download Pixelator, you get a comfy windows application with a slick UI and configuration sliders. It looks pretty much like this:

In addition to the windows application, you also get an executable you can run from shell with all possible arguments. This allows you to automate processing and respond to changes in source files.

When you edit an image in the UI application, there's always a bottom text that shows the exact command needed to reproduce this configuration using the shell command.

Export to multiple formats!

Pixelator can export images to all major image formats: PNG, BMP, JPG, GIF, TIFF... Just add the extension of your choice to the output filename.

Pixelator Telegram Bot

There's an unofficial Telegram Pixelator Bot made by "Kobaj". You can check it out and pixelate images via Telegram!
Please note that the Telegram Bot is not an official part of Pixelator and we can't vouch for your privacy (or safety) when using it.

Do I need any post processing?

No. All the examples you see above are without any post processing - what you see is what you get.
However, the pixelation process is not 100% accurate and its not unthinkable that you'd want to highlight or fix some pixels, especially around eyes and eyebrows area that usually needs to be pixel-perfect.

And what about pre-processing?

if you want clean outlines, its important to remove the background before processing the picture in Pixelator (the outline filter works best with transparent background). Note however that you don't have to be super accurate about the background, since its all going to be pixelated anyway ;)